South Africa
Bills of Exchange Act, 1964
Act 34 of 1964
- Published in Government Gazette 793 on 15 May 1964
- Assented to on 11 May 1964
- Commenced on 15 May 1964
- [This is the version of this document as it was from 15 May 1964 to 28 February 2001.]
1. Definitions
In this Act, unless the context otherwise indicates—"acceptance" means an acceptance completed by delivery or notification; (i)"action" includes a counter claim and a plea of set-off; (ii)"banker" includes a body of persons, whether incorporated or not, who carry on the business of banking; (iii)"bearer" means the person in possession of a bill which is payable to bearer; (xii)"bill" means a bill of exchange as defined in section two; (xv)"cheque" means a bill drawn on a banker payable on demand; (xi)"delivery" means actual or constructive transfer of possession from one person to another; (vi)"holder" means the payee or indorsee of a bill who is in possession of it, or the bearer thereof; (v)"indorsement" means an indorsement completed by delivery; (iv)"issue" means the first delivery of a bill, complete in form, to a person who takes it as a holder; (xiii)"non-business day" means a day contemplated in section four of the Public Holidays Act, 1952 (Act No. 5 of 1952); (vii)"note", used as a noun, means a promissory note as defined in section eighty-seven; (ix)"note", used as a verb, means make a notarial minute, in the usual manner, of the circumstances of dishonour of a bill, within the time prescribed by sub-section (3) of section forty-nine, and includes present for acceptance or payment by a notary; (viii)"payment in due course" means payment made at or after the maturity of a bill to the holder thereof in good faith and, if his title to the bill is defective, without notice thereof; (x)"value" means valuable consideration within the meaning of section twenty-five. (xiv)Chapter I
Bills of exchange — Form and interpretation
2. Definition of and requirements for bill of exchange
3. Effect if different parties to a bill are the same person, or drawee a fictious person or not having capacity to contract
4. Requirements as to drawee
5. Requirements as to payee
6. Negotiability of bills
7. Sum payable
8. When bill is payable on demand
9. When a future time is determinable
10. Omission of date in bill payable after date
If a bill expressed to be payable at the expiration of a fixed period after date, is issued undated, or if the acceptance of a bill, payable at the expiration of a fixed period after sight, is undated, any holder may insert therein the true date of issue or acceptance, and the bill shall be payable accordingly: Provided that—11. Presumption as to correctness of date, and antedating and post-dating, and date of a non-business day
12. Computation of time of payment
If a bill is not payable on demand, the day on which it falls due is determined as follows, namely—13. Reference in case of need
14. Optional stipulations by drawer or indorser
The drawer and any indorser of a bill may insert therein an express stipulation—15. Definition and requisites of acceptance
16. Time for acceptance
17. General and qualified acceptances
18. Inchoate instruments
19. Delivery as requirement for contract on a bill
Capacity and authority of parties
20. Capacity of parties
21. Signature as requirement for liability
No person is liable as drawer, acceptor or indorser of a bill if he has not signed it as such: Provided that—22. Forged and unauthorized signatures
Subject to the provisions of this Act, if a signature on a bill is forged or placed thereon without the authority of the person whose signature it purports to be, the forged or unauthorized signature is wholly inoperative, and no right to retain the bill or to give a discharge therefor or to enforce payment thereof against any party thereto can be acquired through or under that signature, unless the party against whom it is sought to retain or enforce payment of the bill is precluded from setting up the forgery or want of authority: Provided that nothing in this section contained shall affect the ratification of an unauthorized signature not amounting to forgery.23. Procuration signature
A signature by procuration operates as notice that the agent has but a limited authority to sign, and the principal is only bound by such signature if the agent in so signing was acting within the actual limits of his authority.24. Signature as agent or in representative capacity
The consideration for a bill
25. Value and holder for value
26. Accommodation bill or party
27. Holder in due course
28. Presumption as to value and good faith
Negotiation of bills
29. Negotiation of bill
30. Manner of indorsing
31. Indorsement in blank and special indorsement
32. Restrictive indorsement
33. Conditional indorsement
If a bill purports to be indorsed conditionally, the condition may be disregarded by the payer, and payment to the indorsee is valid, whether the condition has been fulfilled or not.34. Continuance of negotiability, and negotiation of overdue or dishonoured bill
35. Negotiation of bill to party already liable thereon
If a bill is negotiated back to the drawer, a prior indorser or the acceptor, such drawer, indorser or acceptor may, subject to the provisions of this Act, re-issue and further negotiate the bill, but he is not entitled to enforce payment of the bill against any intervening party to whom he was previously liable.36. Rights and powers of the holder
The rights and powers of the holder of a bill are as follows, namely—General duties of the holder
37. When presentment for acceptance is necessary, and delay in such presentment
38. Time for presenting for acceptance bill payable after sight
39. Rules as to presentment for acceptance, and excuses for non-presentment
40. Failure to accept within customary time
41. When bill is dishonoured by non-acceptance, and consequences thereof
42. Duties as to and consequences of qualified acceptance
43. Rules as to presentment for payment
44. When presentment for payment may be delayed or dispensed with
45. When bill is dishonoured by non-payment, and consequences thereof
46. Notice of dishonour and effect of failure to give such notice
Subject to the provisions of this Act, if a bill has been dishonoured by non-acceptance or by non-payment, notice of dishonour must be given to the drawer and each indorser, and any drawer or indorser to whom such notice is not given is discharged: Provided that—47. Rules as to notice of dishonour
48. When notice of dishonour may be delayed or dispensed with
49. Protest of bill, and consequences of failure to protest
50. Duties of holder towards acceptor as regards presentment for payment, protest and notice of dishonour, and towards payer on payment of bill
Liabilities of parties
51. Liability of drawee
A bill, of itself, does not operate as an assignment of funds in the hands of the drawee and available for the payment thereof, and the drawee of a bill who does not accept as required by this Act, is not liable on the instrument.52. Liability of acceptor
The acceptor of a bill, by accepting it—53. Liability of drawer and of indorser
54. Liability stranger signing a bill
If a person signs a bill otherwise than as drawer or acceptor, he thereby incurs the liabilities of an indorser to a holder in due course.55. Damages recoverable from parties to dishonoured bill
56. Liability of transferor by delivery
Discharge of bill
57. Discharge by payment in due course
58. Banker paying demand draft where indorsement is forged
If a bill payable to order on demand is drawn on a banker, and the banker pays the bill in good faith and in the ordinary course of business, it is not incumbent on the banker to show that the indorsement of the payee or any subsequent indorsement was made by or under the authority of the person whose indorsement it purports to be, and the banker is deemed to have paid the bill in due course, although such indorsement has been forged or made without authority: Provided such indorsement does not purport to be that of a person who is a customer of the banker at the branch on which the said bill is drawn.59. Discharge by acceptor becoming holder
If the acceptor of a bill is or becomes the holder of it at or after its maturity, in his own right, the bill is discharged.60. Discharge by waiver
61. Discharge by cancellation of bill, and discharge of party by cancellation of his signature
62. Effect of alteration of bill or acceptance
Acceptance and payment for honour, and payment by referee in case of need
63. Acceptance for honour supra protest, and maturity of certain bills so accepted
64. Liability of acceptor for honour
65. Presentment to acceptor for honour and referee in case of need
66. Payment for honour supra protest
Lost instruments
67. Holder's rights if bill is lost
68. Action upon lost bill
In any action or proceeding upon a bill, other than a proceeding for provisional sentence, the court may order that the loss or non-production of the instrument shall not be set up by way of defence, provided an indemnity be given to the satisfaction of the court against the claims of any other person upon the instrument in question.Bill in a set
69. Rules as to a bill in a set
Conflict of laws
70. Rules if laws conflict
If a bill drawn in one country is negotiated, accepted or payable in another, the rights, duties and liabilities of the parties thereto are determined as follows, namely—Chapter II
Cheques - Generally
71. Applicability to cheques of certain provisions relating to certain other bills
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, the provisions of this Act applicable to a bill payable on demand apply to a cheque.72. Presentment of cheque for payment
73. Revocation of banker’s authority
The duty and authority of a banker to pay a cheque drawn on him by his customer are determined by—74. Consequences of failure to protest
The provisions of paragraph (b) of sub-section (1) of section forty-nine shall not apply in respect of the drawer or the payee of a cheque.Crossed cheques
75. General and special crossings on cheques
76. Crossings by drawer, or after issue
77. Crossing a material part of cheque
A crossing authorized by this Act is a material part of the cheque, and it shall not be lawful for any person to obliterate or, except as authorized by this Act, to add to or alter such a crossing.78. Duties of bankers as to crossed cheques
79. Protection to banker and drawer where cheque is crossed
If the banker on whom a crossed cheque is drawn, in good faith and without negligence pays it, if crossed generally, to a banker, and, if crossed specially, to the banker to whom it is crossed, or the latter’s agent for collection, who is a banker, the banker paying the cheque, and, if the cheque has come into the hands of the payee, the drawer shall respectively be entitled to the same rights and be placed in the same position as if payment of the cheque had been made to the true owner thereof.80. Effect of crossing and addition of words "not negotiable" on rights of holder
If a person takes a crossed cheque which bears on it the words "not negotiable", he shall not have, and shall not be capable of giving a better title to the cheque than that which the person from whom he took it had.81. True owner of stolen or lost crossed cheque marked "not negotiable" entitled to compensation from certain subsequent possessors
82. Application of sections 75 to 81 to certain documents other than cheques
Sections seventy-five to and including eighty-one shall also apply to any document issued by a customer of any banker and intended to enable any person to obtain payment on demand of the sum mentioned in such document from such banker (or from any banker, if the document was issued on behalf of the State), and shall so apply as if the said document were a cheque, and the said sections shall mutatis mutandis also apply to any document which—Unindorsed or irregularly indorsed instruments
83. Effect of payment to or crediting of accounts by bankers of amounts of unindorsed or irregularly indorsed cheques and certain other documents
84. Rights of bankers if unindorsed or irregularly indorsed cheques or certain other documents are delivered to them for collection
If a cheque, or draft or other document referred to in section eighty-three, which is payable to order, is delivered by the holder thereof to a banker for collection, and such cheque, draft or document is not indorsed or was irregularly indorsed by such holder, such banker shall have such rights, if any, as he would have had if, upon such delivery, the holder had indorsed it in blank.85. Evidential value of payment of un-indorsed or irregularly indorsed cheques or certain other documents
If an unindorsed or irregularly indorsed cheque, or draft or other document referred to in section eighty-three, has been paid by the banker (including a drawee referred to in sub-section (2) of the said section) on whom it is drawn, such payment shall be prima facie evidence of the receipt by the payee of the sum mentioned in such cheque, draft or document.86. Negotiability of documents referred to in sections 83, 84 and 85
The provisions of sections eighty-three, eighty-four and eighty-five shall not make negotiable any document which, apart from them, is not negotiable.Chapter III
Promissory notes
87. Promissory note defined
88. Delivery a requirement for coming into existence of note
A note is inchoate and incomplete until delivery thereof to the payee or bearer.89. Joint or joint and several liability on notes
90. Time of presentment for payment of note payable on demand and indorsed
91. Presentment of note for payment
92. Liability of maker
The maker of a note by making it—93. Application to notes of provisions relating to bills
Chapter IV
Supplementary provisions
94. Good faith
A thing is deemed to be done in good faith within the meaning of this Act, if it is in fact done honestly, whether it is done negligently or not.95. Signature
If by this Act, any instrument or writing is required to be signed by any person it is not necessary that he should sign it with his own hand, but it is sufficient if his signature is written thereon by some other person, by or under his authority, and the authorized sealing with a seal of a corporation shall be sufficient and be deemed to be equivalent to the signing or indorsement of any such instrument or writing.96. Computation of time
If the reasonable or other time allowed or prescribed by this Act for doing anything is less than four days, non-business days are excluded in reckoning such time.97. When noting equivalent to protest
If a bill or note is required to be protested within a specified time or before some further proceeding is taken, it is sufficient, for the purposes of this Act, if the bill or note has been noted for protest before the expiration of the specified time or the taking of the proceeding, and the formal protest may be extended at any time thereafter as of the date of the noting.98. Protest when notary not accessible
99. Certain provisions of Act applicable to dividend warrants, coupons for interest and postal and money orders
The provisions of this Act as to crossed cheques shall apply also to warrants for the payment of dividends, to coupons for payment of interest and to postal and money orders.100. Laws that are not affected by this Act
Nothing in this Act shall affect or in, any way restrict—101. Repeal of laws
102. Short title
This Act shall be called the Bills of Exchange Act, 1964.History of this document
01 March 2001 amendment not yet applied
Amended by
Bills of Exchange Amendment Act, 2000
15 May 1964 this version
Commenced
11 May 1964
Assented to
Cited documents 0
Documents citing this one 56
Gazette 28
Judgment 26
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